Madagascar THE ECONOMY
Cut-out embroidered tablecloths for sale in a village on the island
of Nosy-Be
Courtesy Brian Kensley
Government Policy and Intervention
Over the years, successive French colonial and
independenceera governments have sought to modernize Madagascar's
economy.
Despite such efforts, the majority of Malagasy in 1994
continued
to earn their livelihoods in ways fundamentally unchanged
from
those of their ancestors--small-scale farms supporting
traditional irrigated rice cultivation, dryland farming of
cassava and other foods, zebu cattle herding, or the
raising of
cash crops.
The first modern land use projects were established by
French
settlers or Creole immigrants from the Mascarene Islands
in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. They introduced cash
crops
such as coffee, sugarcane, vanilla, cloves, and sisal for
export.
They also built small-scale mines to exploit the island's
graphite, chromite, and uranium resources. To facilitate
the
processing and marketing of these commodities, the
immigrants
established a number of financial and commercial
enterprises and
built a small, modern railroad system. They then brought
some
Malagasy into this modern sector of the economy, either as
wage
laborers and sharecroppers on the foreign-owned
plantations, or
as low-level employees in the civil service or business
enterprises. The foreign owners and managers, however,
retained
almost all of the benefits from these operations.
After independence the Tsiranana regime did little to
change
the French domination of the modern sector of the economy,
despite increasing outrage at this continued economic
dependence.
This anger, together with growing concern over an unequal
distribution of wealth that left the southern and western
parts
of the island in relative poverty, caused the ouster of
Tsiranana
in 1972 and a shift in economic policy. The new military
regime
led by Ramanantsoa cut most ties with France and began to
Malagachize the economy. Slow progress toward this goal,
however,
helped to precipitate the end of the Ramanantsoa regime in
mid1975 . Only with the rise of Ratsiraka to the presidency
later
that year did the takeover of formerly French-dominated
enterprises begin in earnest.
Ratsiraka's policy of "revolution from above" went
beyond
confiscating or buying out foreign firms and turning them
over to
Malagasy ownership; he intended to socialize the economy
by
nationalizing major enterprises. The state acquired
majority or
minority ownership in nearly all large financial,
transportation,
marketing, mining, and manufacturing enterprises. Firms
left
under private control were required to buy and sell at
statecontrolled prices, and the state closely monitored the
repatriation of profits. In the rural sector, Ratsiraka
aimed to
establish local farming cooperatives. Almost as important
as this
institutional reform was the regime's intention, announced
in an
economic plan for the 1978-80 period, to increase
dramatically
the level of government capital investment in all sectors
of the
economy in order to improve the availability of goods and
services to all.
By the start of the 1980s, however, Ratsiraka's attempt
to
fashion viable socialist institutions and to stimulate the
economy through increased investment had failed to improve
economic production and welfare. Economic growth
throughout the
1970s had not kept pace with the expanding population.
Despite
the availability of significant agricultural and mineral
resources, the economy was less productive than at the
start of
the decade when the average per capita income was already
among
the lowest in the world. The only apparent effect of the
enhanced
level of investment, which reached all-time highs in the
1978-80
period, was to put the country deeply in debt to foreign
creditors and, therefore, pave the way for a series of
structural
adjustment agreements signed with the IMF and the World
Bank
during the 1980s and the early 1990s. Such agreements were
necessary because as a 1993 World Bank study pointed out,
between
1971 and 1991 the per capita income of Malagasy dropped 40
percent; to return to its 1971 level by 2003, Madagascar
would
require a 6 percent annual growth rate.
Eventually admitting that adoption of the socialist
model of
economic centralization and state control was a mistake,
the
Ratsiraka regime in 1980 initiated a return to a more
classic
liberal economic model that the Zafy regime wholeheartedly
adopted following its inauguration in 1993. The post-1980
Ratsiraka and Zafy regimes have overseen the privatization
of
parastatals (see Glossary),
the disbanding of agricultural
marketing boards, the ratification of more liberal
investment
codes favoring foreign investment, the privatization of
the
banking industry, diversification of traditional,
primary-product
exports, and greater investment in food production. The
Zafy
regime has made reinvigoration of the Malagasy economy its
priority.
The major aims of the Zafy regime's agricultural policy
are
fivefold. The government seeks to make the country selfsufficient with regard to rice by expanding production
through
such measures as increased irrigation. It is also
attempting to
improve the quality of the major export crops--cloves,
coffee,
and vanilla--but to limit their quantities because of
restrictions on world demand. The regime is trying to
develop new
export crops such as cashews, palm oil, shellfish, and
soybeans
and to diversify consumer food products through
introducing
rainfed crops such as corn and sorghum. In addition, the
government is endeavoring to improve agricultural research
and
breeding facilities.
Data as of August 1994
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